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Seniors With Prediabetes Should Eat Better, Get Moving, but Not Fret Too Much About Diabetes

Seniors With Prediabetes Should Eat Better, Get Moving, but Not Fret Too Much About Diabetes

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Almost half of older adults 鈥 more than 65 and older 鈥 have prediabetes, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. How concerned should they be?

Not very, say some experts. 鈥 a term that refers to above-normal but not extremely high blood sugar levels 鈥 isn鈥檛 a disease, and it doesn鈥檛 imply that older adults who have it will inevitably develop Type 2 diabetes, they note.

鈥淔or most older patients, the chance of progressing from prediabetes to diabetes is not that high,鈥 said , chief medical officer of the Endocrine Society, commenting on recent research. 鈥淵et labeling people with prediabetes may make them worried and anxious.鈥

Other experts believe it鈥檚 important to identify prediabetes, especially if this inspires older adults to get more physical activity, lose weight, and eat healthier diets to help bring blood sugar under control.

鈥淎lways a diagnosis of prediabetes should be taken seriously,鈥 said Dr. Rodica Busui, president-elect of medicine and science at the American Diabetes Association, which recommends adults 45 and older get screened for prediabetes at least once every three years. The CDC and the American Medical Association make a similar point in their ongoing campaign.

Still, many older adults aren鈥檛 sure what they should be doing if they鈥檙e told they have prediabetes. Nancy Selvin, 79, of Berkeley, California, is among them.

At 5 feet and 106 pounds, Selvin, a ceramic artist, is slim and in good physical shape. She takes a rigorous hourlong exercise class three times a week and eats a Mediterranean-style diet. Yet Selvin has felt alarmed since learning last year her blood sugar was slightly above normal.

鈥淚鈥檓 terrified of being diabetic,鈥 she said.

Two recent reports about prediabetes in the older population are stimulating heightened interest in this topic. Until their publication, most studies focused on prediabetes in middle-aged adults, leaving the significance of this condition in older adults uncertain.

The by researchers at the CDC, published in April in JAMA Network Open, examined data about more than 50,000 older patients with prediabetes between January 2010 and December 2018. Just over 5% of these patients progressed to diabetes annually, it found.

Researchers used a measure of blood sugar levels over time, . Prediabetes is signified by or a fasting plasma glucose test reading of 100 to 125 milligrams per deciliter, according to the diabetes association. (This glucose test evaluates blood sugar after a person hasn鈥檛 eaten anything for at least eight hours.)

Of note, study results show that obese older adults with prediabetes were at significantly heightened risk of developing diabetes. Also at risk were Black seniors, those with a family history of diabetes, low-income seniors, and older adults at the upper end (6%-6.4%) of the A1C prediabetes range. Men were at slightly higher risk than women.

The findings can help providers personalize care for older adults, Busui said.

They also confirm the importance of directing older people with prediabetes 鈥 especially those who are most vulnerable 鈥 to lifestyle intervention programs, said Alain Koyama, the study鈥檚 lead author and an epidemiologist at the CDC.

Since 2018, Medicare has covered the Diabetes Prevention Program, a set of classes offered at YMCAs and in other community settings designed to help seniors with prediabetes eat healthier diets, lose weight, and get more physical activity. Research has shown the prevention program lowers the risk of diabetes by 71% in people 60 and older. But only a small fraction of people eligible have enrolled.

Libby Christianson, of Sun City, Arizona, has been walking more regularly and is more careful about her diet after learning last summer that her blood sugar level was elevated. 鈥淲hen my doctor said, 鈥榊ou鈥檙e prediabetic,鈥 I was shocked because I鈥檝e always thought of myself as being a very healthy person,鈥 she says. (Libby Christianson)

, published in JAMA Internal Medicine last year, helps puts prediabetes in further perspective. Over the course of 6.5 years, it showed, fewer than 12% of seniors with prediabetes progressed to full-fledged diabetes. By contrast, a larger portion either died of other causes or shifted back to normal blood sugar levels over the study period.

The takeaway? 鈥淲e know that it鈥檚 common in older adults to have mildly elevated glucose levels, but this doesn鈥檛 have the same meaning that it would in younger individuals 鈥 it doesn鈥檛 mean you鈥檙e going to get diabetes, go blind, or lose your leg,鈥 said , daughter of Nancy Selvin and a co-author of the study. She is also a professor at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

鈥淎lmost no one develops the [diabetes] complications we鈥檙e really worried about in younger people.鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 OK to tell older adults with prediabetes to exercise more and eat carbohydrates evenly throughout the day,鈥 said , director of the geriatric diabetes program at Joslin Diabetes Center, an affiliate of the Harvard Medical School. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 important to educate patients that this is not a disease that is inevitably going to make you diabetic and stress you out.鈥

Many older people have slightly elevated blood sugar because they produce less insulin and process it less efficiently. While this is factored into clinical diabetes guidelines, it hasn鈥檛 been incorporated in prediabetes guidelines, she noted.

Nancy Selvin, of Berkeley, California, takes a rigorous hourlong exercise class three times a week and eats a Mediterranean-style diet. Yet Selvin was alarmed last year to learn that her blood sugar was slightly above normal. 鈥淚鈥檓 terrified of being diabetic,鈥 she says. (Kristie Chang)

Aggressive treatments for prediabetes, such as the medication metformin, should be avoided, according to , an endocrinologist and professor of medicine at the Mayo Clinic. 鈥淚f you get diabetes, you will be prescribed metformin. But it鈥檚 just nonsense to give you metformin now, because you may be at risk, to reduce the chance that you鈥檒l need metformin later.鈥

Unfortunately, some doctors are prescribing medication to older adults with prediabetes, and many aren鈥檛 spending time discussing the implications of this condition with patients.

That was true for Elaine Hissam, 74, of Parkersburg, West Virginia, who became alarmed last summer when she scored 5.8% on an A1C test. Hissam鈥檚 mother developed diabetes in adulthood, and Hissam dreaded the possibility that would happen to her too.

At the time, Hissam was going to exercise classes five days a week and walking 4 to 6 miles daily as well. When her doctor advised 鈥渨atch what you eat,鈥 Hissam cut out much of the sugar and carbohydrates in her diet and dropped 9 pounds. But when she had another A1C test at the start of this year, it had dropped only slightly, to 5.6%.

鈥淢y doctor really didn鈥檛 have much to say when I asked, 鈥榃hy wasn鈥檛 there more of a change?鈥欌 Hissam said.

Experts I spoke with said fluctuations in test results are common, especially around the lower and upper ends of the prediabetes range. According to the CDC study, 2.8% of prediabetic seniors with A1C levels of 5.7% to 5.9% convert to diabetes each year.

Nancy Selvin, who learned last year that her A1C level had climbed to 6.3% from 5.9%, said she鈥檚 been trying to lose 6 pounds without success since getting those test results. Her doctor has told Selvin not to worry but prescribed a statin to reduce the potential for cardiovascular complications, since prediabetes is associated with an elevated risk of heart disease.

That conforms with one of the conclusions of the Johns Hopkins prediabetes study last year. 鈥淭aken as a whole, the current evidence suggests that cardiovascular disease and mortality should be the focus of disease prevention among older adults rather than prediabetes progression,鈥 the researchers wrote.

For her part, Libby Christianson, 63, of Sun City, Arizona, started walking more regularly and eating more protein after learning last summer that her A1C level was 5.7%. 鈥淲hen my doctor said, 鈥榊ou鈥檙e prediabetic,鈥 I was shocked because I鈥檝e always thought of myself as being a very healthy person,鈥 she said.

鈥淚f prediabetes is a kick in the butt to move people to healthier behaviors, I鈥檓 fine with that,鈥 said , a geriatrician at the University of California-San Francisco. 鈥淏ut if you鈥檙e older, certainly over age 75, and this is a new diagnosis, it鈥檚 not something I would worry about. I鈥檓 pretty sure that diabetes isn鈥檛 going to matter in your lifetime.鈥

We鈥檙e eager to hear from readers about questions you鈥檇 like answered, problems you鈥檝e been having with your care, and advice you need in dealing with the health care system. Visit聽聽to submit your requests or tips.